A Roadmap for Feynman's Adventures in the Land of Gravitation

A Roadmap for Feynman's Adventures in the Land of Gravitation

A road map for Feynman’s adventures in the land of gravitation Marco Di Mauro1, Salvatore Esposito2, Adele Naddeo2 1 Dipartimento di Matematica, Universit`adi Salerno, Via Giovanni Paolo II, 84084 Fisciano, Italy. 2 INFN Sezione di Napoli, Via Cinthia, 80126 Naples, Italy. September 3, 2021 Abstract Richard P. Feynman’s work on gravitation, as can be inferred from several published and unpub- lished sources, is reviewed. Feynman was involved with this subject at least from late 1954 to the late 1960s, giving several pivotal contributions to it. Even though he published only three papers, much more material is available, beginning with the records of his many interventions at the Chapel Hill conference in 1957, which are here analyzed in detail, and show that he had already consid- erably developed his ideas on gravity. In addition he expressed deep thoughts about fundamental issues in quantum mechanics which were suggested by the problem of quantum gravity, such as superpositions of the wave functions of macroscopic objects and the role of the observer. Feynman also lectured on gravity several times. Besides the famous lectures given at Caltech in 1962-63, he extensively discussed this subject in a series of lectures delivered at the Hughes Aircraft Company in 1966-67, whose focus was on astronomy and astrophysics. All this material allows to reconstruct a detailed picture of Feynman’s ideas on gravity and of their evolution until the late sixties. Accord- ing to him, gravity, like electromagnetism, has quantum foundations, therefore general relativity has to be regarded as the classical limit of an underlying quantum theory; this quantum theory should be investigated by computing physical processes, as if they were experimentally accessible. The same attitude is shown with respect to gravitational waves, as is evident also from an unpub- lished letter addressed to Victor F. Weisskopf. In addition, an original approach to gravity, which arXiv:2102.11220v2 [physics.hist-ph] 2 Sep 2021 closely mimics (and probably was inspired by) the derivation of the Maxwell equations given by Feynman in that period, is sketched in the unpublished Hughes lectures. Dedicated to the Memory of Erasmo Recami. 1 Introduction Richard P. Feynman’s approach to physics was not a sectorial one. According to his vision, all branches of it are parts of a whole, reflecting the innermost unity of nature itself1. In particular, he was among 1For example, in [1], chap. I-3, he says: “If our small minds, for some convenience, divide this glass of wine, this universe, into parts-physics, biology, geology, astronomy, psychology, and so on-remember that nature does not know it! So let us put it all back together, not forgetting ultimately what it is for”, while he explicitly refers to “the underlying unity of nature” in chap II-12. 1 the first to be concerned about the relation of gravitation to the rest of physics2, in a period (the early 1950s) where general relativity practitioners still tended to be isolated from mainstream research, while the so-called renaissance of general relativity would only take place some years later3 [9]. Feynman’s interest on gravity dates at least from late 1954 (as recalled in [10, 11])4. He gave several fundamental contributions in the following years, until the late sixties, when he apparently lost interest in the subject. The sticky-bead argument [2], the Feynman rules for general relativity and the associated ghosts [3], the Caltech Lectures on Gravitation [12], and the Feynman-Chandrasekhar instability of supermassive stars [13], are now part of the common lore about classical and quantum gravity. In this paper we retrace the full development of Feynman’s ideas on this subject. We start from the 1957 Chapel Hill conference, where for the first time Feynman’s thoughts on gravity were publicly expressed and whose written records are widely available [2]. At that conference, which was pivotal in triggering the renaissance of general relativity, the gravitational physics community delineated the tracks along which subsequent work would develop. Besides cosmology, which at the time was still considered “a field on its own, at least at present, not intimately connected with the other aspects of general relativity” ([14], p. 352), the main issues to be addressed at Chapel Hill were [14]: classical gravity, quantum gravity, and the classical and quantum theory of measurement (as a link between the previous two topics). The records of Feynman’s interventions at that conference show that he had already deeply thought, and performed computations, about all three topics, focusing on classical gravitational waves, on arguments in favor of quantum gravity from fundamental quantum mechanics, and finally on quantum gravity itself. We shall therefore develop our narrative along these lines, starting with Feynman’s interventions at Chapel Hill and then following the developments of the subsequent years. Some not well-known unpublished material is considered as well, namely the transcriptions of two sets of lectures, which Feynman delivered in the years 1966-67 [15] and 1967-68 [16] at the Hughes Aircraft Company, which have recently been made available on the web5 [18]. In particular, the 1966-67 lectures [15], which were devoted to astronomy, astrophysics and cosmology, contain a preliminary discussion of the elements of general relativity. This treatment displays many similarities with the more famous Lectures on Gravitation, delivered at Caltech in 1962-63 [12], but also several differences, probably a consequence of the evolution of the physicist’s ideas in the years between the two courses. In those years, as we reported elsewhere [19, 20], Feynman developed a new derivation of Maxwell’s equations, with the aim of finding an original way of teaching electromagnetism. Probably inspired by this, in the Hughes lectures he suggested that a similar approach, with suitable modifications, could be adopted also for gravity. This suggestion is scattered in several places in the 2“The problem of the relation of gravitation to the rest of physics is one of the outstanding theoretical problems of our age”([2], p. 15); “My subject is the quantum theory of gravitation. My interest in it is primarily in the relation of one part of nature to another” ([3], p. 697). 3This expression was coined by Clifford M. Will in his popular book [4] (see also [5]), to denote the period going roughly from the mid-late fifties to the late seventies, in which general relativity gradually switched from being a subject at the margins of physics (as it was from the mid-twenties to the mid-fifties, a period which Jean Eisenstaedt [6, 7, 8] called the low water-mark of general relativity) to being a mainstream subject. 4Since Murray Gell-Mann wrote that Feynman had “made considerable progress”, it is very likely that he had already been working on gravity for some years in 1954, probably starting shortly after taming quantum electrodynamics, in the early 50s. 5The story of how Feynman got involved in teaching at the Hughes Aircraft Company is briefly told in [17]. 2 lectures on astrophysics [15], but also in those given in the following year (1967-68), whose focus was on electromagnetism [16]. Feynman limited himself to these hints, without pursuing them further, plausibly because of the considerably higher analytical complexity of developing full general relativity along these lines, in comparison with electromagnetism. The paper is organized as follows: in Section 2 we introduce the Chapel Hill conference and Feynman’s contributions to it. In Section 3 we focus on gravitational waves and on the sticky-bead argument. In Section 4 we analyze Feynman’s considerations on the foundational issues related to the quantization of gravity. In Section 5 we discuss and put into context his arguments in favor of a field theoretical viewpoint on classical general relativity and on its subsequent quantization. In Section 6 we describe his work on the quantization and renormalization of gravity. In Section 7 we give an overview of the parts of the Hughes lectures of 1966-67 [15] focusing on relativistic gravity issues, and we draw a comparison with the treatment given in the Lectures on Gravitation [12]. Finally, we discuss the approach to gravity sketched both in the 1966-67 [15] and in the 1967-68 Hughes lectures [16]. Section 8 is devoted to our conclusions. 2 The Chapel Hill conference The renaissance of general relativity was characterized by the establishment of a community of re- searchers, which was also achieved through the organization of a series of international conferences entirely devoted to the subject [9]. The first one was the Bern Jubilee conference of 1955 [21], cele- brating the fiftieth anniversary of the formulation of special relativity. The Chapel Hill conference, organized in 1957 by Bryce S. DeWitt and his wife C´ecile DeWitt-Morette [2], was the second one (although it is commonly referred to as GR1, while the Bern conference is called GR0). Unlike the Bern conference, which involved mostly European physicists of the older generation, the Chapel Hill conference involved many younger physicists, in particular many Americans, which would soon become leaders in the field6. In fact, it had a bigger impact on the field and contributed a great deal to defining the trends for most of the subsequent research in classical and quantum gravity, and to recognizing general relativity as a genuine physical theory. This recognition, whose need was widely felt among the practitioners, was indeed the main aim of the conference, as its title (The Role of Gravitation in Physics) clearly shows. An excellent account of the events that brought to the organization of the conference can be found in the introduction to the recent republication of the conference records [2].

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